Believing true things (and more importantly, not believing false things or depending on inappropriate models for prediction) will make your decisions more effective in meeting your goals.
It won’t necessarily make your goals more moral, nor give you the ability to make decisions on more topics that matter (for instance, if you have severe enough impulse control problems, knowledge itself won’t let you follow-up on your belief that stabbing this barista for misspelling your name is a bad idea).
It may make you somewhat more able to see the connections from your behaviors to your goals, and this could make you think on longer time-scales and larger groups of moral patients. If so, this makes you more morally-focused.
Believing true things (and more importantly, not believing false things or depending on inappropriate models for prediction) will make your decisions more effective in meeting your goals.
It won’t necessarily make your goals more moral, nor give you the ability to make decisions on more topics that matter (for instance, if you have severe enough impulse control problems, knowledge itself won’t let you follow-up on your belief that stabbing this barista for misspelling your name is a bad idea).
It may make you somewhat more able to see the connections from your behaviors to your goals, and this could make you think on longer time-scales and larger groups of moral patients. If so, this makes you more morally-focused.